Outline Mivo 14 is a very light, wide, low contrast, reverse italic, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, game ui, tech branding, techy, retro arcade, schematic, edgy, futuristic, futurism, digital aesthetic, display impact, geometric construction, angular, outlined, geometric, monoline, octagonal.
This typeface is built from crisp, monoline outlines with a hollow interior, giving each glyph a drawn-contour, wireframe feel. Letterforms are predominantly geometric and angular, with frequent chamfered corners and squared curves that read as octagonal rather than round. Strokes maintain consistent thickness, counters are open and boxy, and joins are hard-edged with minimal curvature. The overall rhythm is slightly forward-leaning with compact interior space and a mechanical, constructed look that stays consistent across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals.
Best suited to display settings where its hollow outline can be appreciated: headlines, poster titles, game or arcade-inspired graphics, tech/event branding, and interface callouts. It can also work for short labels or signage when given enough size and contrast, but it is not optimized for long reading passages.
The font conveys a distinctly technical, game-like tone—part blueprint, part arcade display. Its skeletal outlines and sharp geometry feel energetic and modern, with a retro digital undercurrent that suggests sci-fi interfaces, robotics, and electronic labeling.
The design intention appears to be a constructed, geometric outline face that emphasizes a futuristic, digital aesthetic. By using consistent contour strokes, chamfered corners, and squared forms, it aims for a schematic, high-impact display look that remains visually coherent across the character set.
Because the design relies on outline-only contours, the perceived color stays light and airy, especially at smaller sizes or on busy backgrounds. The squarish counters and chamfered terminals create strong silhouette recognition in caps and numerals, while the lowercase maintains the same engineered, modular vocabulary.